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OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype TopNYC's <a href="http://inhabitat.com/what-if-new-york-city-competition-winners-announced/">Office of Emergency Management</a> recently erected its first <a href="http://inhabitat.com/nyc/nycs-prefab-post-disaster-housing-units-unveiled-in-brooklyn-photos/">Urban Post-Disaster Housing Prototype</a> in Brooklyn Heights. At first, we only got to see a glimpse of the emergency homes from the outside, but we recently took a grand tour of the space and have plenty of photos to share with you! Click through to see inside the new prefab units, which come complete with balconies, bathrooms and other creature comforts you might not expect to see in post-disaster housing.1
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype Silver sideDuring out visit to the storage container-esque shipped living accommodations; OEM housing recovery program manager Cynthia Barton told Inhabitat that the homes come prefabricated and shipped directly from Indiana2
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype Unit BalconyThe <a href="http://inhabitat.com/bklyn-designs/garrison-architects-showcases-new-post-disaster-urban-interim-housing-prototype-for-nyc/">Garrison Architects-designed homes</a> themselves come in two varieties, a 480-square-foot one-bedroom and an 813-square-foot three-bedroom hovel.3
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype FrontMore than giving displaced homeowners a dry and safe place to stay, Barton said these units would be placed in the residents’ original neighborhoods while their original lodgings are rebuilt.4
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype KitchenFollowing the disastrous aftermath of Hurricane Sandy New Yorkers were forced to find <a href="http://inhabitat.com/nyc/mayor-bloomberg-and-airbnb-announce-they-will-offer-free-housing-to-sandy-victims/">temporary lodgings</a> in cramped hotel rooms while others chose to stay in their damaged houses. Now the OEM wants to give disaster victims a place to stay with all the comforts of their original home including a living area, storage, a full kitchen, and bedroom(s).5
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype HallOn top of all the living amenities, these temporary pads features cork floors, plywood furniture, and the other <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/low-voc/">low volatile organic compound</a> building materials.6
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype MicrowaveEach den is also equipped with <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/energy-star/">Energy Star</a> appliances including an electric stove as well as a LG air conditioner outside every floor.7
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype BedThe cooling and heating systems are also designed to provide zone climate control to every room separately.8
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype StairsOutside LEDs light the staircase and exterior of the building while bits of yellow give the OEM spaces a bit more flair than a regular storage container.9
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype Living roomOEM plans to make its prototype a permanent fixture in the neighborhood for at least a year. In the coming months OEM employees, city officials, and local universities will live in the test unit to evaluate how well it does as a long-term abode.10
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype BathroomIn the long run the organization also hopes <a href="http://inhabitat.com/nyc/nyc-to-test-out-prefabricated-post-disaster-housing-prototype-in-brooklyn/">this stacked storage container design</a> will become the national model used to aid disaster victims everywhere in the United States.11
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype Dining Table“We knew the biggest challenge would be using them as permanent structures and so these are connected to the municipal systems,” Barton said explaining the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/emergency-housing/">emergency housing</a> unit could stay as long as it’s needed. “It’s designed to be as durable any other kind of housing. It meets all the NYC housing code.”12
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype Bedroom Closet“We’ve already learned a lot about how to build this quickly in the city in terms of the permitting processes that you would have to go through in a <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/natural-disaster/">disaster</a>,” Barton expounded.13
OEM Urban Post Disaster Housing Prototype Couch“I think the design is a good one, so we’ve been happy about how every thing came together and we’re looking forward to seeing how it all holds up."14














